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APUSH REVIEW Politics and the Cold War. As found in Barron’s Study Keys EZ-101 American History 1877 t o the Present Published 1992. Theme 11: Politics and the Cold War.
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APUSH REVIEWPolitics and the Cold War As found in Barron’s Study Keys EZ-101 American History 1877 t o the Present Published 1992
Theme 11: Politics and the Cold War Tensions latent between the United States and the U.S.S.R. during the World War II surfaced at the end of the hostilities. This strained relationship, characterized as the “Cold War”, produced hostility and suspicion between the two superpowers and deeply affected American foreign and domestic policy. An outbreak of antiradical hysteria surfaced as the United States reconverted to a peacetime economy.
Key 61: Truman administration: Foreign policy Overview: After Franklin D. Roosevelt’s untimely death in April 1945, Harry S Truman assumed the presidency. Largely inexperienced in foreign policy, he viewed the Soviet Union with suspicion and dislike. • Containment: George F. Kennan, an influential diplomat, proclaimed that U.S. policy toward the Soviet Union should focus on the containment of Russia’s expansive tendencies, a principle later enunciated as the Truman Doctrine. • Truman Doctrine: President Truman’s foreign policy principle, stated before Congress on March 12, 1947. • It viewed communism as an ideological threat that must be met anywhere in the world, even if it did not directly involve the Soviet Union. • It urged American economic and military aid to any nation threatened by communism. • In accord with the doctrine, Congress approved $400 million in aid to Greece and Turkey to fight Communist aggression. • Marshall Plan: Announced be Secretary of State George C. Marshall at a Harvard University commencement in 1947. • Approved by Congress in 1948 and was known as the European Recovery Program, it granted over $12 billion of economic assistance to European nations. • The Soviet Union and its eastern satellites rejected this assistance • The plan • The plan’s purpose was both humanitarian and political • An economically prosperous Europe would aid America’s growth and would also impede the advance of communism • The Mutual Security Act (1951) continued the foreign aid program (both military and economic) started under the Marshall Plan. • Atomic Energy Commission (1946): Established by the McMahon Act, it promoted the use of atomic energy for peaceful purposes and safeguarded national security
Key 61: Truman administration: Foreign policy • National Security Act (1947): Established a new Department of Defense, the National Security Council (NSC), and the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) • The NSC supervised foreign and military policy through the president, several cabinet members, and other advisers. • The CIA was responsible for collecting information through open and covert methods and for engaging in secret political and military operations abroad. • Through this act the executive branch expanded its control over all defense activities. • Rio Treaty (1947): The United States and 20 other American nations agreed to provide for the security of all American nations against acts of aggression. All would determine what action to take against an aggressor of any one of them. • Berlin Airlift (1948-49) England, France, and the U.S. had merged their occupation zones into a new West German republic. • The U.S.S.R. then prohibited all land traffic between Berlin and West Germany • In response, the American Air Force air lifted needed supplies to West Berlin for almost a year until Stalin lifted the blockade • In October 1949, Germany was officially divided • North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) (1949): Formed by 12 Western European nations, declaring that an armed attack against one member constituted an attack against all. NATO countries would maintain a military force in Europe as defense against a possible Soviet invasion. • Warsaw Pact (1955): A response to NATO, this military alliance aligned the Soviet Union with Poland, East Germany, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Romania, and Bulgaria. • Soviets explode atomic bomb (1949): This shocking revelation by President Truman on September 22, 1949, encouraged the arms race between the superpowers.
Key 61: Truman administration: Foreign policy • Point Four Program (1949): Proposed by President Truman, it offered technical assistance, sponsored and financed largely by the U.S., to underdeveloped nations • Approved by Congress, it encouraged foreign trade • It also helped to halt Communist expansion around the world • Establishment of Communist China (1949): The Nationalist forces under Chiang Kai-Shek were defeated by the Communist forces and fled to the island of Taiwan in December 1949. The U.S. did not recognize the Maoist gov’t as the legitimate Chinese gov’t • Japan as an ally: American occupation of Japan ended in 1951, when a peace treaty was signed. A security treaty, also signed, gave the U.S. military bases in Japan. • Conflict in Korea: In 1948, the Republic of (South) Korea was established, as well as the People’s Republic (North Korea.) • In 1949, the U.S.S.R. and the U.S. withdrew their military forces from North and South Korea respectively. • On June 25, 1950, North Korean troops, alleging an attack, entered South Korea. • The UN Security Council ordered North Korea to withdraw • UN and U.S. troops fought in this “police action”, which was actually a limited war • When Douglas MacArthur, commander of the troops, sought to expand military operations against the Chinese, he was removed from his command by President Truman • Under General Matthew Ridgway, armistice negotiations began in 1951 and in 1953 North Korea and the UN reached an armistice agreement • A cease-fire line, north of the 38th parallel, was established • In 1954 the US and South Korea signed a treaty guaranteeing U.S. assistance if South Korea was attacked • United States-Philippines Security Treaty (1951): The two nations agreed to consult together on measures of self-defense in case of an armed attack on either. • ANZUS Treaty (1951): The US, Australia, and New Zealand agreed to settle disputes among themselves peacefully and to consult together when any signer was threatened by an attack in the Pacific area. A council of foreign ministers was established to carry out the treaty.
Key 62: Truman administration: Domestic policy Overview: The postwar years brought both prosperity and economic problems to the U.S. The federal gov’ts increased expenditures for defense and domestic programs were partly responsible for the nation’s prosperity. Inflation and labor strife created economic unrest. • General economic picture: Marked by several trends: • The rise in the birthrate increased the demand for goods and services, which in turn encouraged consumer spending • A growth in business and gov’t bureaucracy and greater diversification of corporations occurred • White collar and service employment rose, and women’s participation in the labor force increased • Agriculture declines as an occupation • More people flocked to urban centers and suburbs • Reconversion: Economic problems resulted with the transition from a wartime to a peacetime economy • The Civilian ProductionsAdministration, created in 1945, promoted the reconversion from wartime to civilian production. • In less than a year the armed forces were reduced from 12 million to 3 million • The sudden outpouring of consumer demand produced runaway inflation • Labor strikes: Economic difficulties caused major strikes in automobile, electrical, railroad, mining, and steel industries. • In 1946, for example, 400,000 United Mine Workers went on strike • After coal fields had been shut down for 40 days, the gov’t seized the mines • Fair Deal: Term used to describe President Truman’s new liberal agenda, which consisted of a 21-point domestic program submitted to Congress on September 16, 1945 • In the New Deal tradition, it advocated expanding Social Security benefits, increasing the minimum wage, a full employment program, slum clearance, public housing, and gov’t sponsorship of scientific research • Other proposals were added later, but congressional conservationism blocked these reforms
Key 62: Truman administration: Domestic policy • Employment Act 1946: Supported the use of gov’t spending to spur economic growth and established a Council of Economic Advisors appointed by the president and responsible to him • Fulbright Act 1946: Provided scholarships for U.S. students to study in foreign countries. Funds came from payments made by foreign countries in their own currency after purchasing U.S. surplus equipment • Legislative Reorganization Act 1946: Streamlined many Congressional procedures • Reduced standing committees • Increased congressional salaries to $12,500 • President’s Committee on Civil Rights 1946: Issued a report entitled “To Secure These Rights,” which advocated stronger civil rights laws • While no civil rights legislation was passed, Truman began the desegregation of the armed forces • He also appointed black judges to federal courts and issued an executive order barring discrimination in federal employment • Presidential Succession Act 1947: Spelled out the succession to the presidency after the vice president: speaker of the House of Representatives, president pro tempore of the Senate, secretary of state, and other cabinet members • Taft-Hartly Act 1947: Known as the Labor-Management Relations Act and considered antiunion, it was vetoed by Truman but approved by a congressional override. • Prohibited the closed shop • Required union leaders to take a non-Communist oath • Forbade union contributions to political campaigns • Required unions to have public financial statements • Established a 60-day cooling off period before striking • Allowed suits against unions for broken contracts and damages • Symbolized the end of New Deal reform, effected by the Republican-controlled 80th Congress
Key 62: Truman administration: Domestic policy • Public Housing Administration 1947: Created slum clearance projects and low-rent and emergency housing projects, and also managed and disposed of emergency housing and similar projects instituted during the war • Election of 1948: Often cited as an example of polling inaccuracy. • The Democratic convention was split • Southern conservatives formed the States’ Rights (“Dixiecrat”) party and nominated South Carolina gov’nor Strom Thurmond for president. The party opposed the civil rights plank in the Democratic platform • Liberals formed a new Progressive party and ran Henry A. Wallace for president. The party favored gradual socialism, the abolition of racial segregation, and a conciliatory attitude toward Russia • Governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York was the Republican’s choice; his views were not substantially different from Truman’s. • Calling a special session of a “do-nothing” Republican Congress, Truman failed to get them to enact their platform’s liberal measures • Truman supported civil rights, increased price supports for farmers, and repeal of the Taft-Hartley Act • He won a narrow victory, 49.5% of the popular vote, although polls had predicted a victory for Dewey. Fair Deal legislation: After the election, the 81st Congress was not cooperative as Truman attempted to win approval for civil rights legislation, health insurance, and aid to education. On the positive side: • Congress extended some New Deal reforms by increasing the minimum wage and expanding Social Security by raising benefits and extending coverage to more Americans • The National Housing Act 1949 authorized the construction of low-income housing units over 6 years, accompanied by long-term rent subsidies.
Key 63: The Cold War at Home Overview: Postwar America was characterized by a fear of Communist subversion. • House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC): Established under Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1938, it was designed to disclose foreign influences in the US • In 1947, Republicans launched investigations to link Democratic rule with Communist subversion • The HUAC investigated the film industry, charging that American films contained Soviet propaganda • Alien Registration Act (Smith Act) 1940: Set criminal penalties for teaching or advocating revolution, or for belonging to a group that did either • It required aliens to register with federal authorities • Under it, 11 Communist leaders were convicted in 1949 of conspiring to teach the violent overthrow of the US government • Forty other Communist leaders were convicted and imprisoned in 1951 for violating the act • Federal Loyalty Program 1947: Designed to review the “loyalty” of federal employees • “Loyalty boards” investigated federal workers, and in 1950 Truman authorized the dismissal, in sensitive departments, of those labeled as bad security risks • By 1951, 212 employees had been dismissed and over 2,000 had resigned • State and local governments then launched similar programs, while courts handed down harsh sentences to defendants accused of subversion • Colleges, schools, and unions also began to root out Communist sympathizers • Alger Hiss: A former State Department official against whom charges were leveled by Whittaker Chambers, a confessed Soviet agent. • Accusing Hiss of stealing State Department documents, Chambers led investigators to Hiss’s farm, where microfilm copies of documents were found in a hollowed-out pumpkin • After two trials, Hiss was convicted of perjury and was sentenced to 5 years in prison • McCarran Internal Security Act 1950: Enacted over Truman’s veto, it required all Communist organizations to register with the government and to publish their records • Communists were denied passports and were prohibited from working in defense plants • Individuals affiliated with “subversive organizations: overseas were denied U.S. visas
Key 63: The Cold War at Home • Civil Defense Act 1951: Created the Federal Civil Defense Administration, which would develop a plan of defense against atomic attack, and assisted local and state civil defense agencies to enact their programs • Ethel and Julius Rosenberg: Convicted of atomic espionage and sentenced to death in 1951 • Public protests and appeals to the Supreme Court failed • The death sentences were carried out in 1953 • McCarren-Walter Act 1952: Passed over Truman’s veto • Codified all existing restrictions on immigration • Retained the quota system, but removed discrimination against Asians • Gave the attorney-general the right to deport certain undesirables • Joseph McCarthy: As Republican Senator from Wisconsin (1947-57), he became the leading crusader against communism • During a speech in 1950, in Wheeling, West Virginia, he claimed to possess a list of 205 known Communists currently employed in the State Department • He attacked the Truman and Eisenhower administrations for allowing Communists to hold gov’t positions. • In his highly publicized investigation of subversion, which examined various branches of gov’t, he did not produce conclusive evidence that nay federal employees had Communist ties • On December 2, 1954, the Senate voted to censure him. • Election of 1952: Illinois Governor Adlai E. Stevenson, the Democratic candidate, favored by liberals and intellectuals, was defeated by the Republican candidate, general Dwight D. Eisenhower, a war hero and former commander of NATO • The Republican promised to end the Korean War and accused the Democrats of being soft on communism and of tolerating corruption in Washington • Eisenhower received 55% of the popular vote